Damage operator based lifetime calculation under thermo-mechanical fatigue for application on Ni-resist D-5S turbine housing of turbocharger

2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (6) ◽  
pp. 1565-1575 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marko Nagode ◽  
Frank Längler ◽  
Michael Hack
Author(s):  
Wei Guo ◽  
Henry Guo

Turbochargers are commonly used to boost internal combustion engines for both on and off high way applications to meet current emission regulations and performance requirements. Divider wall turbochargers have two exhaust gas inlets and twin scrolls with the divider cast wall connected. Turbochargers with divider wall feature could conserve an engine’s exhaust pulse kinetic energy for great turbine wheel efficiency. It is widely used in 6-cylinder engine applications. Turbochargers with divider wall configuration operate in very hostile conditions with high temperature and great thermal gradient. Using thinner divider wall feature benefits aerodynamic performance, but with the configuration turbine housing may show cracks and large deformation during thermal cycling. In order to achieve the balance between mechanic and aerodynamic, design study of a reasonable divider wall is required. This paper first presents the initial design with thinner divider wall, which experienced severe cracking problem in the divider wall location during the engine thermal shock testing. In order to capture the failure mode at divider wall region, finite element analysis (FEA) with thermal mechanical fatigue (TMF) and creep interaction is performed. The simulation repeats the failure mode very well which shows this numerical analysis method is convincing and fast for further study. Base on the failure case and successful cases, TMF with creep interaction simulation criteria is proposed. The criteria could be used as the reference for the further design, and the design should be controlled within the criteria limit. Based on the methodology and the criteria, the new design is analyzed and the simulation result shows the risk is low. Engine thermal shock testing is done for the final validation. This design has acceptable cracks and no large deformation at divider wall location under the testing condition. TMF and creep interaction gives a right and fast methodology to capture the failure mode at divider wall. Meanwhile it provides a knowledge base for the turbine housing divider wall design.


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 1184-1192
Author(s):  
Anja Gosch ◽  
Jutta Geier ◽  
Florian Arbeiter ◽  
Michael Berer ◽  
Gerald Pinter

2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Ahmed Allali ◽  
Sadia Belbachir ◽  
Ahmed Alami ◽  
Belhadj Boucham ◽  
Abdelkader Lousdad

AbstractThe objective of this work lies in the three-dimensional study of the thermo mechanical behavior of a blade of a centrifugal compressor. Numerical modeling is performed on the computational code "ABAQUS" based on the finite element method. The aim is to study the impact of the change of types of blades, which are defined as a function of wheel output angle β2, on the stress fields and displacements coupled with the variation of the temperature.This coupling defines in a realistic way the thermo mechanical behavior of the blade where one can note the important concentrations of stresses and displacements in the different zones of its complex form as well as the effects at the edges. It will then be possible to prevent damage and cracks in the blades of the centrifugal compressor leading to its failure which can be caused by the thermal or mechanical fatigue of the material with which the wheel is manufactured.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 5675
Author(s):  
Josip Brnic ◽  
Marino Brcic ◽  
Sebastian Balos ◽  
Goran Vukelic ◽  
Sanjin Krscanski ◽  
...  

Knowledge of the properties and behavior of materials under certain working conditions is the basis for the selection of the proper material for the design of a new structure. This paper deals with experimental investigations of the mechanical properties of unalloyed high quality steel S235JRC + C (1.0122) and its behavior under conditions of high temperatures, creep and mechanical fatigue. The response of the material at high temperatures (20–700 °C) is shown in the form of engineering stress-strain diagrams while that at creep behavior (400–600 °C) is shown in the form of creep curves. Furthermore, based on uniaxial fully reversed mechanical fatigue tests (R=−1), a stress-life (S-N) fatigue diagram has been constructed and the fatigue (endurance) limit of the material is calculated The experimentally determined value of tensile strength at room temperature is 534 MPa. The calculated value of the fatigue limit, also at room temperature, using the modified staircase method and based on the mechanical fatigue tests data, is 202 MPa. With regard to creep resistance, steel 1.0122 can be considered creep-resistant only at a temperature of 400 °C and at an applied stress not exceeding 50% of the yield strength corresponding to this temperature.


Materials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 147 ◽  
Author(s):  
José Correia ◽  
Abílio De Jesus ◽  
Shun-Peng Zhu ◽  
Xiancheng Zhang ◽  
Dianyin Hu

This thematic issue on advanced simulation tools applied to materials development and design predictions gathers selected extended papers related to power generation systems, presented at the XIX International Colloquium on Mechanical Fatigue of Metals (ICMFM XIX) organized at University of Porto, Portugal, in 2018. Guest editors express special thanks to all contributors for the success of this special issue—authors, reviewers, and journal staff.


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